Rethinking Reading, Writing, and a Moral Code in Contemporary France: Postcolonializing High Culture in the Schools of the Republic

Rethinking Reading, Writing, and a Moral Code in Contemporary France: Postcolonializing High Culture in the Schools of the Republic

by Michel Laronde
Rethinking Reading, Writing, and a Moral Code in Contemporary France: Postcolonializing High Culture in the Schools of the Republic

Rethinking Reading, Writing, and a Moral Code in Contemporary France: Postcolonializing High Culture in the Schools of the Republic

by Michel Laronde

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Overview

High Culture is the symbolic culture inherited from classical literature that is transmitted to French children by the “Schools of the Republic” in the form of citations and clichés that represent a conventional cultural capital. The book follows the process of learning how to read and write in French primary and secondary schools as it is represented in the fiction written by authors whose experience was that of pupils born from North and sub-Saharan African immigrant parents during the 1960-2000 period.
Autobiographical novels by ‘beur’ and Afro-French authors (1980s and 1990s respectively) and one film by Merzak Allouache (1996) disclose some of the strategies for learning how to read and write that challenge the conventions of a State-controlled school system inherited from the Third Republic during colonial times. From the experience of Kassa Houari’s self-initiation to French literature in his autobiographical text, to revaluating cultural clichés in and out of school by Zaïr Kedadouche, Azouz Begag or Calixthe Beyala, a postcolonial mentality emerges from the literature of a post-1980s multicultural France where Orality plays a key role in reinterpreting clichés from High Culture and informs a new moral Code. Rethinking Reading, Writing, and a Moral Code astutely suggests a need for the school system to rethink its didactic approach to teaching language and literature, if French education is to reflect the postcolonial character of contemporary cosmopolitan culture and facilitate the integration of communities of diverse ethnic origins.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739181669
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 05/29/2014
Series: After the Empire: The Francophone World and Postcolonial France
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Michel Laronde is professor of French and francophone studies at the University of Iowa.

Table of Contents

Contents
Translator’s Notes
Preface
Theoretical Preamble: Displaced Discourses: Post(-)coloniality, Francophone Space(s), and the Literature(s) of Immigration in France
Introduction: Writing as Sociocritics
Insert 1. Premiers textes littéraires: For a Preface
Chapter 1. Orality: A Code for a Postcolonial Reading?
Insert 2. “A Common Basis for Knowledge”
Chapter 2. From Reading to Writing. Self-Education for an “Untamed” Thinking Process
Insert 3. Azouz Begag
Chapter 3. The Text Robber. Textual Irony, Cultural Irony
Insert 4. A Matter of Morals. 2005: “La Marseillaise” Is Back in the Schools of the Republic
Insert 5. Truth and Lying: L’ingratitude
Chapter 4. From One Parasite to Another or How to Circulate Between Culture and Language
Insert 6. The Beur of Success
Chapter 5. Tactics or Strategy? Learning Alternative Ways of Reading or How to Debunk Stereotypes
Insert 7. A Play on Words: Photocopying / Photocopillage
Insert 8. Récitation
Chapter 6. La Fontaine and Salut Cousin!. The Margin from Inside in Arabo-French Cinema
Conclusion: High Culture and Multiculturalism
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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